Nevertheless, I'm enjoying this strange ride for what it is and soaking up these last moments with the Gloriana Villaneuva family.

The realistic moments of the episode were great, but the moments that leaned heavily into telenovela territory fell short.

Jane: You know what, I'm not scared of you anymore. I'm just sick of you. Narrator: Jane, stop. You're going to get yourself killed. Jane: I tell my son every night that monsters aren't real. But they are. I'm looking at one. But you'll never win.Rose: So, wait. We are gonna do the speech now?Jane: Because you know what else I tell him? Good always triumphs over evil.

What happened to the plastic surgery genius who could change her appearance at the snap of her fingers?

The one who befriended Michael as Susanna and faked his whole death?

We needed that Rose to come out and play.

Petra: Or maybe I'm just not meant to couple up. Maybe it's not my destiny. I have a great life without a partner. And honestly, the Marbella satisfies me in a way I don't a lover ever could. Rafael: I am so glad we got divorced.

Rose was capable of so much more than what she delivered in her final hurrah.

There's a chance Rafael picked up on Jane's tapping while in her alien costume, but realistically, it was almost impossible.

Then again, maybe I should just let all of this go and accept that it's a telenovela?

Jane and Rafael survived, Luisa redeemed herself as the heroine of the story, and Rose fell to her death, impaled by some Mars icicle, which served as a terrific callback to the glory days of Jane the Virgin Season 1.

And it looked like she was burned at the stake, too. Fitting.

Good riddance to a once-promising villain who couldn't live up to her reputation.

Many of us thought that Jane the Virgin would bring back Michael so he could finally take down Rose once and for all.